> From: Brad Kemper [mailto:brad.kemper@gmail.com]
> Sent: Saturday, July 10, 2010 5:33 PM
> To: Sylvain Galineau
> Cc: fantasai; Rob Crowther; www-style@w3.org
> Subject: Re: A List Apart: Articles: Prefix or Posthack
> He would probably only notice when he upgraded his browser, and then
> complain to the intranet author (or Web-page-based tool provider) about
> why their crappy pages break every time the browser is updated. Didn't
> that vendor claim compatibility with browser X?
If the new version shows a broken page, the browser usually gets first
blame, not the page.
> > It may also implicitly assume that most users do run the latest
> version of a
> > given browser.
>
> Why is that? Old browsers are not affected by newer browsers, only by
> the removal or changing of the properties in the style sheets.
Because it implicitly assumes that by the time the prefixed property is
removed, the older versions of the browser - those that can only handle
the prefixed version - are no longer around. This is not true of all
browsers and all environments as we know from IE6 and IT shops around
the world.
> Right. Something in between is fine.